Is it possible that I can have a Calcium hardness reading of slightly over 50? I have tested it with strips and it reads below 100, more like closer to 50. If I understand correctly, 200 - 400 is the proper range and I'm way off. I have an 18K Gal pool, PH and alkalinity are fine, CYA is way high (gonna dilute soon), and chlorine disappears daily (probably because of the high CYA). This is a new pool having only been filled last month with water from main line. Can it be possible that there is no calcium in the water? According to calculations, I would have to add lots of pounds of calcium to get it to the proper range.

It is very possible if you have naturally soft water or water softener.

I have a water softener and the hose bib on the back of the house near my pool is from the "softened" line. As a result, my CH was about the same when I first moved in three months ago. I just recently got it to crack 200.

===============================
I'm no expert...just a long time pool owner. The real experts are at www . troublefreepool . com

Ah ok. Would you happen to know a good online shop or chain store to purchase the calcium in bulk? According the BleachCalc program, I would need about 54 lbs of calcium chloride. There aren't many pool stores around where I live and the quantity I need seems alot.

Litoq wrote:Ah ok. Would you happen to know a good online shop or chain store to purchase the calcium in bulk? According the BleachCalc program, I would need about 54 lbs of calcium chloride. There aren't many pool stores around where I live and the quantity I need seems alot.

Thanks a lot all for the responses!! I don't have a heater and there really isn't any metal (except skimmer screws and the pump) that the water contacts. I think I will add a little just to be safe (or maybe just to conform to the norm).

Litoq wrote:Thanks a lot all for the responses!! I don't have a heater and there really isn't any metal (except skimmer screws and the pump) that the water contacts. I think I will add a little just to be safe (or maybe just to conform to the norm).

Calcium Hardness really comes into play with Plaster pools, because plaster has calcium in it. The water will literally draw the calcium right out of the pool walls to satisfy it's demand. If the CH is high, it will deposit scale on pipes, heaters and pumps...like you get on your water faucet if you have hard water.

If you have a vinyl liner and no heater, it really isn't anything to worry about at all. In fact if your pool is clear now, adding calcium could cloud things up.

If it aint broke, don't fix it!

===============================

I'm no expert...just a long time pool owner. The real experts are at www . troublefreepool . com